Torture children

Date: May 10, 2013
Location:

Albert V. Bryan U. S. Courthouse
401 Courthouse Square
Alexandria, VA, 22314

On Friday, May 10, CCR has an important oral argument in our case against private military contractor CACI for torture at Abu Ghraib. CACI seeks dismissal of Plaintiffs’ Alien Tort Statute (“ATS”) claims following Supreme Court’s ruling in Kiobel v. Royal Dutch Petroleum. CCR and co-counsel are arguing that Plaintiffs’ ATS claims are in no way foreclosed by Kiobel. Plaintiffs will also be presenting argument on a number of other pending motions, including that they have properly adequately alleged CACI’s liability for participation in a conspiracy.

  CCR Legal Director Baher Azmy will be presenting oral argument at the May 10th hearing before Judge Gerald Bruce Lee, which is open to the public. Please come out and support this critical case for corporate accountability and justice for the survivors of Abu Ghraib.
 
What: Public hearing on Defendant CACI’s motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ ATS claims in Al Shimari v. CACI
Where: Eastern District of Virginia’s Alexandria courthouse
When: Friday, May 10, 2013 at 10:00 a.m.

Please attend and stand against torture! Show them that we have not forgotten!

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‘Rampant’ police brutality with Obama; the sheriff proud of the ‘worst prison in the world’; as the independent task force finds Guantanamo torture ‘indisputable’,  ‘Orwell would have been pressed to conceive the plight of the 86: cleared for release, but denied freedom, using a hunger strike as their last weapon, only to be kept alive by the very people who will not let them go’ – The Independent’s Rupert Cromwell on the concentration camp where even the Pentagon admits most are innocent.

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Mohammad Khaleq is one of more than 8,000 Palestinian children held by Israel since the year 2000.

Mohammed was born in New Orleans [Addameer]

Ramallah, occupied Palestinian territories - On April 11, in one of the trailer caravans that house the Israeli military courtrooms at Ofer prison, three boys sat in the brown Israeli Prison Service shabas uniform. Their feet shackled, their eyes darting between the judge, their lawyers, and their families.

The youngest was 14-year-old Mohammad Khaleq, a short, skinny boy with a light brown birthmark under his right eye and a heart murmur since birth. Mohammad was arrested from his home in the village of Silwad, near Ramallah, in a 2:00am raid on Friday April 5. Eight heavily armed soldiers burst in to the modest home, waking the Khaleq family - the two parents and six children, the youngest just six years old – and gathered them in one room.

“The soldiers thought they had come to arrest me,” Mohammad’s father, 46-year-old Abdelwahab, told Al Jazeera. “When they saw that Mohammad was just a kid they felt embarrassed, but they still took him away.”

Mohammad, who was born in New Orleans and holds US citizenship, was reportedly beaten up inside the Israeli military jeep and taken to an illegal Israeli settlement named Ofra, where he says he spent twelve hours blindfolded, handcuffed, and shackled at the legs. Israeli soldiers would roughly move him from one area to the next, and in one instance he says, pushed him so hard he fell on a rock and broke his dental braces.

At 2:00pm, he was taken to the Benyamin police detention centre, where he was interrogated for a further two hours without the presence of a lawyer or his parents. By that time, Abdelwahab had arrived at the detention centre and was demanding to see his son. Mohammad heard his father’s voice, and told Al Jazeera that Israeli interrogators “tricked him” into confessing to throwing rocks in exchange for being able to see his father. Mohammad says he confessed, but was not allowed to see his father.

A Israeli military spokesman said no abuse complaints had been filed at the time of his detention, according to the Associated Press news agency.

Legal aid?

“The soldiers thought they had come to arrest me. When they saw Mohammed was just a kid they felt embarrassed, but they still took him away.

- Abdelwahab Khaleq, Mohammed’s father

It wasn’t until two days later that a lawyer had access to Mohammad, who was moved to Ofer prison in Betunia, northwest of Ramallah. Four days after his arrest, a representative from the United States consulate saw Mohammad. The US official later called Mohammed’s father. “There is not much we can do,” Abdelwahab was told.

“What do you expect from the US government?” asked Abdelwahab, who moved to the occupied Palestinian territories in 1999. “They’re obligated to do something for a US-born child with American citizenship, but they won’t.”

The US State Department confirmed the arrest of the US citizen by the Israeli authorities in the West Bank. “We expect any government that arrests a US citizen to ensure the US citizen is treated fairly,” read a statement issued the day before Mohammad’s first hearing. “Our role in an arrest case generally includes monitoring cases with a view to whether US citizens are treated properly, ensuring that they have access to a list of attorneys, and facilitating communication with family and friends.”

Arresting children

Mohammad Khaleq, an honours student in the ninth grade, is one of 236 Palestinian children in Israeli jails, according to UNICEF. Having a foreign passport in addition to his Palestinian identity papers does not grant Mohammad any special treatment, and he is set to be tried in a military court that does not fully differentiate between children and adults. 

An estimated 700 children are arrested by Israel every year, according to a recent report [PDF] released by UNICEF, where many suffer beatings, verbal abuse, psychological intimidation and sleep deprivation. Since the year 2000, more than 8,000 children have been arrested, with the Israeli military court conviction rate standing at 99.74 percent.

This image, representing a Palestinian prisoner in an
Israeli jail, went viral on social media in 2012
[Hafez Omar]

The most common reason for arresting Palestinian children is for throwing rocks, yet Defense for Children International lists other purposes, such as to recruit future collaborators and informers for the Israeli government, to obtain information that could incriminate others, to threaten and intimidate those who actively resist the Israeli occupation, and to use the children as bargaining chips to pressure communities or politicians.

Under Israeli military order 1644 (2009), a military juvenile court was established. This followed international criticism of Israel over children as young as 12 being tried in adult courts for the previous 40 years. The changes are largely cosmetic, say analysts, as children are still tried in military courts and are subjected to four days’ incarceration without seeing a (military) judge. They can be held for 60 days in detention without being charged, and up to 90 days without seeing a lawyer.

“Under Military Order 1651, children aged 14-15 years old are classified as ‘young adults’ and therefore minors,” explained Randa Wahbeh, an advocacy officer with Addameer, a prisoner rights organisation.

“They can serve a maximum sentence of 12 months in prison, unless the offence carries a maximum penalty of five years or more. So, in the case of Mohammad, who is being charged with throwing stones at a moving vehicle, the maximum penalty is 20 years – so, theoretically, he can be sentenced to the maximum penalty of 20 years.”

Stone throwing

Firas Sabbah, Mohammad’s lawyer, said that the 14-year-old was being charged with throwing rocks between September 2012 until April 2, 2013.

“Theoretically, he can be sentenced to the maximum penalty of 20 years.

- Randa Wahbeh, Addameer

“It’s impossible to release him on bail,” Sabbah said. “The best case is to cut a deal. The problem is that Mohammad himself confessed to throwing rocks five times a week at [yellow-licensed Israeli] cars on Route 60, and on April 2 on Israeli military jeeps as they entered Silwad.”

His father says that is not possible.

“There’s no way he threw rocks that frequently,” argued Abdelwahab, who studied a pre-medical programme at the University of Colorado. “Either I or his mother pick him up after school and take him home. Throwing rocks will not do anything against the Israeli occupation except burying the kid six feet under. Resisting in my opinion should be through knowledge and college.”

Mohammad’s case, first adjourned to Sunday, April 14, was again deferred to Wednesday, April 17 as the Israeli prosecutor requested an extension to examine the boy’s case further. As Mohammad got up to leave, he flashed a small smile in the direction of his father, who advised him to organise his time well in prison, to keep reading, and to stay away from the inmates who smoke, which might aggravate his heart murmur.

“Do not under any circumstances take any medicine from them,” his father warned. “I don’t trust them. Take care of yourself, son.”

Follow Linah Alsaafin on Twitter: @LinahAlsaafin

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Posted by Pratap Chatterjee
CorpWatch Blog

Two U.S. companies can be prosecuted for the alleged role of their employees in torture at the Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq, a U.S. federal court ruled last week. The companies are CACI of Arlington, Virginia, which provided the interrogators at the prison, and L-3/Titan of New York city, which provided translators at the same location.

Two lawsuits are pending. The first was brought on June 30, 2008 against CACI by Suhail Najim Abdullah Al Shimari, Taha Yaseen Arraq Rashid, Sa’ad Hamza Hantoosh Al-Zuba’e and Salah Hasan Nusaif Jasim Al-Ejaili. The second was also filed June 30, 2008 by Wissam Abdullateef Sa’eed Al-Quraishi and 71 other plaintiffs against L-3/Titan.

Shimari says he was subjected to electric shocks, deprived of food, threatened by dogs, and kept naked while forced to engage in physical activities to the point of exhaustion. Rashid says he was placed in stress positions for extended periods of time, deprived of oxygen, food, and water, shot in the head with a Taser gun, and beaten so severely that he suffered from broken limbs and vision loss.

Al-Zuba’e says he was tortured by being subjected to extremely hot and cold water, his genitals were beaten with a stick, and he was detained in a solitary cell in conditions of sensory deprivation for almost a full year. Al-Ejaili says he was stripped and kept naked, threatened with dogs, deprived him of food, beaten and kept in a solitary cell in conditions of sensory deprivation

The other 72 Iraqis who sued L-3/Titan alleged that they were subjected to “electric shocks, rape and other forms of sexual assault, forced nudity, broken bones, and deprivation of oxygen, food and water” by the contractors during their detention.

CACI and L-3 say that since they were working for the federal government during combat, they cannot be judged by a court because of “absolute official immunity” and “sovereign immunity” respectively.

The court dismissed this argument. “(T)here is no indication … that the Supreme Court intended to construe the law-of-war defense as an immunity from suit, rather than merely an insulation from liability,” wrote Judge Robert Bruce King of the Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit in his opinion issued on May 11, 2012. Ten other judges supported him and three disagreed.

“Today’s ruling provides an opportunity for victims of torture at Abu Ghraib to tell their stories to an American court and to obtain justice from the private military contractors who played such a prominent role in one of the most shocking episodes of abuse in recent American history,” said Baher Azmy of the Center for Constitutional Rights, who co-argued the case for the plaintiffs.

“The ruling is especially important in light of the unprecedented rise in the use of private military contractors in war zones,” says Susan Burke, lead counsel on the case. “Ultimately, these cases should be about whether the actions of the defendants constituted war crimes and torture in violation of the law and not about whether or not the perpetrators should receive impunity even if they engaged in torture.”

The New York Times agrees. “Hawks may spin the Fourth Circuit’s decision as a victory for bleeding heart liberals,” writes Andrew Rosenthal, the newspaper’s editorial page editor. “But really this is about preserving the most traditional legal principle there is: that criminals should answer for their crimes.”

L-3/Titan’s work in Iraq has been the subject of a lengthy investigation by CorpWatch “Outsourcing Intelligence in Iraq.” Amnesty International provided a set of recommendations on how the federal government should address the role of contract interrogators and translators in the field.

Source

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US Zerocracy in IRAQ

We all remember the scandal of the 21st century : The violations of the US troops against the Iraqi prisoners in Abu Ghuraib . It seems like this “Democratic” idiology has passed to the Corrupt Iraqi government which is backed by the US government .

The following story is told by one of the detainees in the Criminal Investigation Service in Maliki’s government about the methods of torture adopted by Maliki’s government . 

He says the first thing they are doing is completely stripping the accused and they consider stripping as the most important mean of psychological torture and refraction , then the interrogation starts with the continuous torture , then the interrogators offer the detainee a list of crimes and force him to adopt one of them !

(More below the fold, including a hard to watch video)

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By BASSEM MROUE

Syrian Ibrahim Jamal al-Jahamani,
who was recently released from
Syrian jail where he said he saw a
15-year-old boy tortured to death,
speaks in an interview on the
Syrian-Jordanian border
Thursday, July 7, 2011. He points
to his eyes, signaling that he saw
the boy _ Tamer Mohammed
al-Sharei_ beaten to death by
his Syrian interrogators. Al-Sharei
disappeared in the southern Syrian
flashpoint town of Daraa on April 29, 2011. Al-Jahamani said he saw the
boy at a compound run by Syria’s
powerful Air Force Intelligence and
after his release witnessed the
videos of the dead teenager that
shocked many people in the Arab
world. (AP Photo/Raad Adayleh)

Inside a filthy detention center in Damascus, eight or nine interrogators repeatedly bludgeoned a skinny teenager whose hands were bound and who bore a bullet wound on the left side of his chest. They struck his head, back, feet and genitals until he was left on the floor of a cell, bleeding from his ears and crying out for his mother and father to help him.

Ibrahim Jamal al-Jahamani, a fellow prisoner who said he witnessed the brutal scene in Syria in May, heard the interrogators demand that the 15-year-old proclaim strongman Bashar Assad as his “beloved” president.

The youth, later identified as Tamer Mohammed al-Sharei, refused. Instead, he chanted an often-heard slogan from anti-regime street protests calling for “freedom and the love of God and our country.”

Tamer’s refusal apparently was the final straw for the interrogators.

“Guards broke his right wrist, beating him with clubs on his hands, which were tied behind his back,” al-Jahamani told The Associated Press after his release from detention, referring to the beatings as torture.

“They also beat him on the face, head, back, feet and genitals until he bled from the nose, mouth and ears and fell unconscious,” he recalled.

“He pleaded for mercy and yelled: ‘Mom, dad, come rescue me!’” al-Jahamani said. “He was lying like a dog on the floor in his underwear, with blood covering his body. But his interrogators had no compassion that they were savagely beating a boy,” al-Jahamani added, his voice breaking with emotion.

Tamer and al-Jahamani were two of thousands of Syrians caught up in mass arrests of those suspected of opposing Assad during an uprising that began in March.

Al-Jahamani witnessed the beating from a corridor lined with cells while he was waiting for two hours for the prison guards to take him to his cell. He said the corridor reeked from the stench of blood and dirty toilets and the cell beds were covered in dirty sheets.

At the lockup run by Syria’s Air Force Intelligence, security forces kept Tamer bound and nearly naked, his body covered in blood and bruises, while interrogators broke his forearm and teeth.

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(Malaysian Mirror) – Rape and abuse of women and children by US troops were almost a daily affair at the Abu Ghraib prison in Baghdad, while continuous torture, sexcriminalise war.jpgual degradation, forced drugging and religious persecution were also normal occurrences at the Guantanamo Bay prison camp.

Stories of these atrocities were told before a commission headed by Dr Mahathir Mohamad on the sidelines of a three-day international conference to criminalise war, organized by the Perdana Global Peace Organisation at the Putra World trade Centre here on Friday.

The commission heard that whole families and children as young as nine-years-old were also subject to the tortures and sexual assaults at these camps.

Forced nudity and sexual abuse

Iraqi Jameela Abbas Hameedi, 54, said she was arrested in Baghdad in January 2004 with her entire family, allegedly for supporting and funding forces against the US invasion.

“The US army beat me with tubes and a plastic chair until it broke.

“A plastic shard entered my leg and caused a bad infection. I had to undergo surgery without any anaesthetic,” said Jameelah, who was also allegedly stripped to her underwear in a “black room” of the prison and bashed against a wall.

Her only daughter and a nephew were beaten and tortured naked for six months until Jameelah admitted that she supported the resistance, she claimed.

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by MinistryOfTruth

 Perhaps the worst incident at Abu Ghraib involved a girl aged 12 or 13 who screamed for help to her brother in an upper cell while stripped naked and beaten. Iraqi journalist Suhaib Badr-Addin al-Baz, who heard the girl’s screams, also witnessed an ill 15-year-old who was forced to run up and down with two heavy cans of water and beaten whenever he stopped. When he finally collapsed, guards stripped and poured cold water on him. Finally, a hooded man was brought in. When unhooded, the boy realized that the man was his father, who doubtless was being intimidated into confessing something upon sight of his brutalized son.

uswarcrimes.com

Empathy is what keeps men from becoming MONSTERS.

Simulposted at docudharma.com

MinistryOfTruth’s diary :

    They did it brazenly in front of other prisoners. Nothing but a sheet separated the sound of screaming and the torment of children.

    This is how you create your own insurgency.

    From this PDF obtained by The Washington Post I have transcribed a portion of an Iraqi detainees testimony to a Titan Corp translator detailing horror in Abu Gharib.

 I saw REDACTED fucking a kid, his age would be about 15 – 18 years. The kid was hurting very bad and they covered all the doors with sheets. Then when I heard the screaming I climbed the door because on top it wasn’t covered, and I saw REDACTED who was in military uniform putting his dick in the little kids ass.

~snip~

 They put the sheets again on the door. Grainer and his helper they cuffed one prisoner in room #1, named REDACTED, he was an Iraqi citizen. They tied him to the bed and they were inserted the phosphoric light in his ass and he was yelling for God’s help.  

   The web address on that PDF is media.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/world/iraq/abughraib/151108.pdf. How long they have had this info and neglected to report on it I cannot guess.

 

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by Ralph Lopez

Share this on Twitter – President Carter: Many Children Were Tortured Under Bush

“You have the power to hold your leaders accountable.” – President Obama, Ghana, July 14, 2009

While congress says it is gearing up to investigate what is old news, that CIA and Special Ops forces are killing Al Qaeda leaders, a decision of far different gravity is being contemplated by Attorney General Eric Holder.  The new insistence of Congress on its oversight role, conspicuously absent throughout 8 years of Bush, is suddenly rearing its head in the form of questioning a policy which has been in place with no controversy for years.  The U.S. has been hunting and killing Al Qaeda leaders outside of official war zones since 2004, when the New York Times reported that Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld had signed an order authorizing Special Forces to kill Al Qaeda where they found them.

Ralph Lopez’s diary

As recently as September 2008 CBS reported that Special Forces struck Qaeda leadership in Pakistan.

The decision faced by Holder, whether or not to appoint a Special Prosecutor on torture, is of a different gravity altogether.  A weight of evidence keeps building which indicates torture was employed on innocent men, that it didn’t work, and that it didn’t prevent any attacks.  And it gets worse.  Bush’s own FBI Director Robert Mueller recently confirmed to the New York Times what he told Vanity Fair a year ago, that “to [his] knowledge” torture didn’t prevent a single attack.  Former Legendary CIA Director William Colby has said that torture is “ineffective.”

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By David Swanson

This moment, in which the Attorney General of the United States claims to be considering the possibility of allowing our laws against torture to be enforced seems a good one in which to reveal that I have seen over 1,200 torture photos and a dozen videos that are in the possession of the United States military. These are photographs depicting torture, the victims of torture, and other inhuman and degrading treatment. Several videos show a prisoner intentionally slamming his head face-first very hard into a metal door. Guards filmed this from several angles rather than stopping it.

The Special Broadcasting Service (SBS) of Australia revealed several of these photographs, video of the head slamming, and video of prisoners forced to masturbate, as part of a news report broadcast in 2006. But the full collection has not been made available to the public or to a special prosecutor, although it was shown to members of Congress in 2004. When these photos are eventually made public, I encourage you to take a good look at them. After you get over feeling ill, it might be appropriate to consider Congress’ past 5 years of inaction. You’ll be able to feel sick all over again.

 

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